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Find ideas, requested features, or options for the Xbox Store Cross-buy digital games Between Xbox 360 and Xbox One When purchasing a digital game on Xbox one you should be allowed to download the same game on the Xbox 360 or vise versa. Playstation network has the option in there PSN store to cross-buy PS3, PS4, and PSVita and play them on any console you would like. We’ll send you updates on this idea In general, game publishers do not offer a free version of a game for Xbox One if you bought it for Xbox 360, and vice versa, although some publishers may choose to offer upgrades to the Xbox One version for a small fee. However, with Xbox One Backward Compatibility, you can play a growing number of Xbox 360 games on Xbox One, including digital and disc-based titles, with advanced features like Game DVR and in-home streaming to Windows 10; you can also keep all your game saves, add-ons, and hard-won achievements from Xbox 360. With your Xbox Live Gold membership, you can play multiplayer games and chat with friends across Xbox One and Xbox 360.




Plus, Games with Gold titles for Xbox 360 are now playable on Xbox One through Xbox One Backward Compatibility, giving you more free games to play every month. 1 2 3 4 5 Next → The Clubs & LFG Forum Is Live! Our newest Feature Area forum, Clubs & LFG, is now live! We've added a bunch of ideas that you can now vote on both in the Feature Area forum and in the Clubs & LFG category of theNew Ideas forum! Go to the new Clubs & LFG forum and vote for your favorite ideas! Post a new idea… Console Hardware & Accessories Friends, Messages, & Activity Feed Home, Xbox Guide, and Settings OneGuide & Live TV Profile, Achievements, & Game Hubs Xbox App on Mobile (iOS & Android) Xbox App on Windows 10 Posting Guidelines & FAQ Recognizing the greatest achievements in animation, the nominations for the 42nd annual Annie Awards have been announced. Some of the year’s biggest animated hits in film, television, and videogames, as well as a few critically loved but not as commercially successful hits are among the biggest nominees.




The Boxtrolls leads with the most feature nominations, at 13, while How to Train Your Dragon 2 earned 11 and Big Hero 6 garnered 10 nominations. Notable nominations in other categories include a Simpsons couch gag, Dan Harmon’s Rick and Morty, and the gorgeous looking World War I-set video game Valiant Hearts. Check out more nominees ahead of the show itself, which will take place on Jan. 31, 2015 at UCLA’s Royce Hall, and look for the full list, as well as archives of previous award shows, at the Annie Awards’ website. How to Train Your Dragon 2 Song of the Sea The Book of Life The Tale of The Princess Kaguya Best General Audience Animated Television/Broadcast Production Best Animated Television/Broadcast Production For a Children’s Audience Over The Garden Wall Valiant Hearts: The Great War Best Animated Special Production Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey Dawn of the Dragon Racers How Murray Saved Christmas




Toy Story That Time Forgot Best Animated Short Subject Inside Homer – The Simpsons Couch Gag (Episode #549) Me and My Moulton Best Animated Television/Broadcast Commercial Citizen M: ‘Swan Song’ Flight of the Stories Outstanding Achievement for Directing in an Animated Television/Broadcast Production Adventure Time, Yuasa Masaaki, Eunyoung Choi Bob’s Burgers, Jennifer Coyle & Bernard Derriman Disney Mickey Mouse, Aaron Springer Gravity Falls, Rob Renzetti Over The Garden Wall, Robert Alvarez, Ken Bruce, Larry Leichliter The Simpsons, Matthew Nastuk Wander Over Yonder, David Thomas Outstanding Achievement for Directing in an Animated Feature Production Big Hero 6, Don Hall & Chris Williams How to Train Your Dragon 2, Dean DeBlois Song of the Sea, Tomm Moore The Book of Life, Jorge R. Gutierrez The Boxtrolls, Anthony Stacchi & Graham Annable The Lego Movie, Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, Directors;




The Tale of The Princess Kaguya, Isao Takahata Outstanding Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television/Broadcast Production Disney Mickey Mouse, Darrick Bachman The Powerpuff Girls, Dave Tennant, David P. Smith, Chris Mitchell & Will Mata The Simpsons, Rob LaZebnik The Simpsons, Tim Long Toy Story That Time Forgot, Steve Purcell Outstanding Achievement for Writing in an Animated Feature Production Big Hero 6, Robert L. Baird, Daniel Gerson & Jordan Roberts Song of the Sea, Will Collins The Boxtrolls, Irena Brignull & Adam Pava The Lego Movie, Phil Lord & Christopher Miller Outstanding Achievement for Animated Effects in an Animated Production Mr. Peabody & Sherman Outstanding Achievement for Animated Effects in a Live Action Production The Amazing Spider-Man 2 The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Transformers: Age of Extinction X-Men: Days of Future PastI have not yet seen Lego Batman, but that is only because I haven’t been able to line up a sitter.




That movie was already at the top of my to-see list, but now it’s really up there, because an Internet wingnut is condemning Lego Batman as “pro-gay propaganda.” According to The Mary Sue, a guy named John-Henry Watson founded a site called Voice of the Family, which is a pro-life, anti-LGBT site that has taken to deep-thinking children’s movies for signs of progressive propaganda, and boy, did he ever find it in Lego Batman. Now, the thing is, there’s not really any pro-gay propaganda in Lego Batman, much to my personal disappointment. If Watson had been reviewing Avatar: Legend of Korra or Steven Universe, he might have a point. (As an aside, both of those shows are amazing and you should watch them and bring the kids. Steven Universe might get a whole article on its own in the near future for its gender-norm-subverting wonderfulness.) But there are no obvious LGBTQ characters in Lego Batman and no actual same-sex romantic relationships. Still, Watson is seeing sneaky gay propaganda behind every brightly colored brick.




“It was chock full of pro-gay propaganda,” Watson wrote of the Lego Batman movie. “Think the sexual innuendo of the Flintstones minus the real humor. It seemed the creators were so anxious to subtly indoctrinate the little ones into the gender ideology that making it humorous came as a distant second thought.” Apparently the cause of all this drama is that in the movie Robin–Dick Grayson–is adopted by Bruce Wayne/Batman. We all know that Bruce Wayne is Batman–if you didn’t, uh, sorry for the spoilers–but Dick does not. Because Dick does not know that Bruce Wayne and Batman are the same person, he thinks he has been adopted by Bruce Wayne *and* Batman, and thus he thinks he has two dads. John-Henry Watson’s problem with the movie is that Grayson thinks he has two dads and does not suddenly collapse in on himself in a pile of drug use, gay panic, and depression. Yesterday he had no dads, today he has two. (And the fact that one is a billionaire and the other is Batman would thrill anybody.

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